Friday, April 12, 2024

wheat barley asparagus alfalfa ramps...that's enough for one day

temperatures here are down out of the seventies ( fahrenheit ) and into what you could call a more "seasonable" range...
and two tenths of an inch of rain brought the total for the month so far to one and six tenths inches of precipitation...
combine that with a day off and it seemed a good time to make a run out to campus to take care of a few things...
in the one bed i am working this year i found...
a total of seven spears up and running...not nearly ready for harvest which is a bit behind last season...
the transplanted alfalfa on the west end of the bed is doing fairly well and i would suspect putting most of its enegry into re-establishing roots...not unreasonable and an explanation for the sparse green...
unfortunately the alfalfa on the east end seems to be failing...when i pulled it up i found the roots still moist and supple so we will leave it for now and hope...
i turned and hoed the back side of the bed...
and, despite james scott's injunction and the faddist dietary hoo-ha, i planted rows of einkorn and emmer wheat as well as barley...if it goes well there will be cereal grains by mid-summer...
back home in the east bed there is asparagus up as well...
some of which has escaped the bed...
the barley i planted back there five days ago is germinating...
as is the wheat, albeit more slowly...it may not be cool enough for its taste...
one of the container planted spuds i put in last month has broken surface...a russet i believe...
i have four stands of alfalfa back there all of which are looking greener and more lush than the campus relatives...then again they have not been moved twice in five years and are well established...we will be feeding the bees and providing the solitary ones with nesting material..
i am always pleased when ramps begin to pop up in the bed on the north side of the house...i am hoping some flower this season and produce seed...we will see...
and, finally, jerusalem artichokes have begun to appear...a few days earlier than last year...and those were earlier than 2022...and the earlier arrivals can be regressed a few years to the point we are almost a month earlier than they were in the past decade...a native to these parts it is worth watchng their behaviors as a climate marker...they usually bloom in august...it will be worth noting what happens this coming july

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